J.Y. Living Experiment Studio / HAO Design


© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese


© Hey!Cheese


© Hey!Cheese


© Hey!Cheese


© Hey!Cheese

  • Architects: HAO Design
  • Location: Kaohsiung City, Taiwan
  • Architect In Charge: HAO Design
  • Area: 137.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

From the architect. Huangpu Village, built as dormitories by the Japanese army in support of its marching south during World War II, was the first military village in Taiwan. The traditional Japanese architecture bears a special history. After Japan was defeated and had surrendered, the dormitories became deserted from continual disrepair. In 1947, the Army Training Command Headquarters was relocated to Fengshan. General Sun Li-jen and many of the military officers were arranged to stay in the dormitories left by the Japanese, originally named “Chengzheng Village”. The dormitories were later renamed


© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

“Hunagpu Village” when the Hunagpu Military Academy was re-established in Fengshan and Kaohsiung became the center of military affairs from 1930 to 1980.

The reconstruction project of the military village was completed at the end of 2013, and Huangpu Village was about to be dismantled. Fortunately, people from various communities came together and fought for keeping this village. The City Hall proposed the listing of Huangpu Village as the city’s cultural landscape, which was approved by the Review Council. Project “Residence for Maintenance” was launched in 2015, after which cultural workers and citizens were encouraged to apply for temporary residence. HAO Design was in charge of restoring an old house which it named the “J. Y. Living Experiment Studio”. We tried to give the house a unique style while retaining its original structure. In addition to keeping to the historical context, HAO Design built an imaginative “Living Lab”, a workshop for lectures, drawings, sketches and cement work. This studio also provided art residency and exchange, allowing members of the renovation project to practice interior design skills and creating their ideal lifestyle at the Studio.


© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

Although renovating an old house was an exciting task, the house when we took over was falling apart. There were no water or electricity. Considering the historical significance of this building and its special cultural value, the project team strove to create a new sense of space without causing too much damage. For instance, the roof tiles were characteristic of a Japanese building, but the roof leaks were a serious problem. The team had to apply waterproofing coating before restoring the tiles. The red gate symbolic of a military village had already been replaced by a modern aluminum gate, so we decided to introduce the industrial feature of Kaohsiung by presenting a red freight container gate which reflects the culture and landscape of Kaohsiung city.


© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

Upon entering the container gate to J. Y. Studio, there is a short walk to the porch; despite the brief distance, we arranged walkways to indicate directions into various spaces and grouted several footpaths. We used gravel and sand at the corners to grow tropical plants suitable for the climate of southern Taiwan. Succulents, Japanese ivy, golden barrel, small cactuses, agaves and crane flowers were planted in the small entrance garden, bringing vitality and imagination to an old space. At the garden side of the house, we built a small wood pallet terrace connected to the sliding door and covering the outdoor AC unit. Capturing the essence of a Japanese building, this outdoor terrace allows people to sit and enjoy the breeze in a moment of leisure. To recreate the stone steps common in Japanese houses, we built a series of “Lego bricks”


© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

with waterproof wood adjacent to a small pink door in hopes of bringing elements of fun and imagination to the space.

Entering the house through the unaltered green porch, one is reminded of an elevated Japanese house. Originally the master bedroom, the washitsu (a Japanese-style room) is the main space of J.Y. Experiment Studio. The wardrobe was preserved completely and turned into a functional wall cabinet once the side panel had been removed. It can be used to store books and display a radio, typewriter, vases, suitcases and other such decorative objects. The structure of the ceiling was also preserved but painted in cocoa to echo the wooden tones of the room. The board on the wall was covered with wallpaper of weaving patterns to retain a Japanese style. The wooden sliding window that faces the garden was remade with solid wood. The lower part of the window was replaced with transparent glass, which allows for sunlight and an unobstructed view for those sitting in the room.


© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

© Hey!Cheese

The anteroom retains the original ceiling, terrazzo floor and brown walls of the old house, preserving the beauty and simplicity of a traditional era. We arranged track lighting here and set it out as an exhibition space. We decorated the space with Taiwanese armchairs produced in the 50s using R-shaped wooden tenons; a classical Japanese Karimoku sofa popular in the 60s; Taiwanese trumpet stools reminiscent of pop art from the 70s; and a yellow floor lamp symbolic of the Space Age. With a delicate old medicine cabinet and a rattan tea table, the embellished interior brings back the flavors of the past. The mix and match between Taiwanese and Japanese elements form a unique but non-conflicting atmosphere. Besides practicing with room decoration, the project members also gather at the washitsu to watch movies. This old house has survived the selection of time. By understanding it and incorporating our interpretations within it, we in the present hope to safeguard its beauty and continue to demonstrate the variety and possibilities of life.

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Tenhachi House / .8 Tenhachi Architect & Interior Design


© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima


© Akihide Mishima


© Akihide Mishima


© Akihide Mishima


© Akihide Mishima

  • Constractor: Seamless co.,Ltd.

© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima

New Plan

New Plan

From the architect. This is a renovation for our own apartment in Kanagawa. .8 (TENHACHI) Architect & Interior design reconfigured the layout of the 67-square-meter property, creating one big open space with two open box spaces. The concrete ceiling and beams are left exposed throughout, contrasting with the white walls and furniture doors that have been added. None of the walls reach the ceiling, which allows us to see that the new infill pieces are different from the structure of the original concrete.


© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima

Except for the Toilet, all the spaces are connected. Two added boxes open to the main connected space. We think that there are both public behaviors and private behaviors in a house. These two boxes play the role of a gentle connector.


© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima

 The lower level of the white box is a bedroom with a hidden atmosphere, made intimate by a floor level 50mm lower than the living room. The upper level is the ladder-accessed kids-space, special for children thanks to the low ceiling height and scale.


© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima

 Wood flooring surrounds the wooden box, and the angled lines continue into the wall. This box contains the Bathroom, Basin, and Washing spaces, with big openings to the living room. White curtains are the only soft material, installed for privacy. Viewed from the Living Room, the interior of this box appears as a three-dimensional frame. The Bathtub and Rain Shower are at center stage, brightened by the backing of white hexagonal tiles.


© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima

  At the heart of the Living area is a 4.5m long table, made of Japanese cedar (sugi). This central table hosts many functions, acting as the kitchen, dining, workspace, and kids’ drawing space. The table is not divided by functions, but instead gently connects them. Daily family situations take place here, and when people gather for parties, this transforms into a 20 seat common table.


© Akihide Mishima

© Akihide Mishima

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Siglap Plain / Aamer Architects


© Sanjay Kewlani

© Sanjay Kewlani


© Sanjay Kewlani


© Sanjay Kewlani


© Sanjay Kewlani


© Sanjay Kewlani

  • Civil And Structural Engineers: S B Ng Pte Ltd
  • Quantity Surveyor: BKG Consultants Pte Ltd
  • Main Contractor: Heng Chiang Pte Ltd

© Sanjay Kewlani

© Sanjay Kewlani

From the architect. Located in front of a bus-stop at a junction of a minor road and a busy main road, this reconstruction of a small bungalow house is attracting attention from the community for its dynamic form and interesting use of materials. The unique combination of raw off-form concrete and finely crafted solid teak screens from Bali veils and protects the house from its harsh urban environment without compromising on views, natural light and ventilation.


© Sanjay Kewlani

© Sanjay Kewlani

First Floor Plan

First Floor Plan

Solid boundary walls and landscaping mitigate the traffic noise from the main road while providing an intriguing visual delight to bus drivers, passengers and passersby.
The grand double volume living room, surrounded by a mezzanine study, library and corridors improves connection between occupants and gives the living space a dynamic interactive quality.


© Sanjay Kewlani

© Sanjay Kewlani

At ground level, the internal spaces of the house blends easily with the outdoor decks, gardens and swimming pool, which also provides passive cooling to the house.
The master bedroom located in the attic enjoys the comfort of deep overhangs, plenty of natural light and long distant views, not typical of such a dense urban site. 


© Sanjay Kewlani

© Sanjay Kewlani

Second Floor Plan

Second Floor Plan

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136 Moorhouse Ave / Phil Redmond Architecture + Urbanism


© Hazel Redmond Photography

© Hazel Redmond Photography


© Hazel Redmond Photography


© Hazel Redmond Photography


© Hazel Redmond Photography


© Hazel Redmond Photography

  • Structural Engineers: TMCo Limited
  • Hydraulic Engineers: TMCo Limited
  • Fire Engineers: TMCo Limited
  • Mechanical: TMCo Limited
  • Land Surveyors: Access Land Surveying
  • Main Contractors: Amalgamated Builders Limited, Amalgamated Builders Limited , Thermosash Limited

© Hazel Redmond Photography

© Hazel Redmond Photography

Plan

Plan

From the architect. Located overlooking the proposed Metro Sports Facility at the Western end of Moorhouse Ave on the fringe of the Christchurch CBD, the brief called for a new commercial development with a mix of bulk retail, office space and hospitality.

As the new building is on a major arterial route in Christchurch, it primarily experienced while driving. Our design approach was to generate the building as a billboard that shifts dynamically as you drive East or West along Moorhouse Ave, capturing the motorists’ attention.


© Hazel Redmond Photography

© Hazel Redmond Photography

Elevation

Elevation

The building is cast as collection of characters and references to Christchurch’s architectural canon. Amongst others, the cast includes the striped façade of the Antigua Boat Sheds, and the zigzag verandah of Paul Pascoe’s, now lost, Christchurch Domestic Airport Terminal.

During demolition of the previous earthquake damaged building on site a large hand painted sign was revealed, ‘The Farmers’. As this sign would be archived again, between our new building and the neighbours’ existing building, we decided it should to be translated into the design of the façade of the new building.


© Hazel Redmond Photography

© Hazel Redmond Photography

Diagram

Diagram

An abstract machine was created to manipulate the vertical sun shading fins and gloss/matt Alucobond panels of the façade through Binary and Morse code to give the impression of a random fin and façade pattern, allowing the ‘The Farmers’ sign to be coded within the new façade.

Functionally, the ground floor consists of a café/restaurant space at the entrance corner. This space opens an outdoor dining area underneath the faceted mirror stainless soffit of the cantilevered floor above.


© Hazel Redmond Photography

© Hazel Redmond Photography

The remainder of the ground floor consists of large format retail and office space.

The first floor is accessed via a dramatic double height foyer space, which is capped with a large skylight. A faceted wall battened with cedar cascades down from the skylight to the ground.

The foyer staircase is defined a blackened steel balustrade which folds into flush into the tiled floor at the base of the staircase.


© Hazel Redmond Photography

© Hazel Redmond Photography

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Project of the Month: San Bernardo Chapel

Stereotomic architecture is characterized by two strong themes: the continuity of the forces of gravity to the ground, into the soil; and the search for natural light, which drills through the massive, solid walls to illuminate and allow habitation by the human being. It’s from these themes that this project takes its power.


Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Today we present to you May’s Project of the Month, the San Bernardo Chapel, which in its search to transform ecclesiastic symbolism uses nature as a way of ritual expression. The client required a place in a remote location that accommodated religious acts and rituals, in a context in which time is reflected by the use of recycled materials—materials that have been a part of the place for more than 100 years. This established construction criteria based on ancient masonry techniques. However, the project also involved the use of new materials in the interior of the work, creating an interesting play of textures.

San Bernardo Chapel / Nicolás Campodónico


Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Through the careful selection and arrangement of materials the architect creates two key effects: one in which the outside of the building gives testament to the passage of time, and the second one in which a warm atmosphere is produced by the light illuminating the new interior bricks.


Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

The main idea of the project is in relation to the incoming horizontal grazing of light and the projection of the cross on the inside. – Nicolas Campodónico, Architect

The interior vault system—which references the historic coal ovens used to fire bricks in Argentina—is used to allow light to enter without any interruptions, and at the same time to generate a contrast between the red bricks and the shadow created by the beams, forming a cross at a certain time of the day. Alluding to the Via Cruces, the architect brings the elements together with a simple gesture, using nature to complete the project’s symbolic element and transforming the architecture into something higher than a human act.


Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

The sensuality of the materials, and how nature is introduced into the project, tells us that this is a place of timelessness; it brings our consciousness into a holy place, where even surrounded by modern architecture it returns to its origin.


Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

Courtesy of Nicolás Campodónico

See the full project post here:

Capilla San Bernardo / Nicolás Campodonico

Located in the Pampa plains, in the east of the province of Cordoba, Saint Bernard´s Chapel (the local patron saint) rises in a small grove, originally occupied by a rural house and its yards, both dismantled in order to reuse their materials, especially its one-hundred-year-old bricks.

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How was the design process? What technologies did you use to design form and stability?

The design process was based on certain assumptions, some from the commission itself and others on issues that we wanted to develop. Some of these issues are more specific as those related to the site, and others were more conceptual such as the idea of replacing symbolisms for rituals. The spaces (indoor and outdoor) were conceived and designed to be instruments of the concepts raised. The interior form was developed with analog tools (hand drawings and physical models). The project’s location must respond to a given solar position, it was calculated with a physical model scale 1:20 placed in site on August 20, 2011, day of Saint Bernard’s day. The stability of the structure was taken from the base of the argentinian coal oven, also called “half orange” although for the chapel, a section of it was removed to allow horizontal natural light inside. This operation is the greatest challenge, both constructive and structural. All this led us to investigate ancient technologies that are already obsolete and try to reconstruct empirical knowledge.

 How the arrangement of bricks influence the structure? Can you illustrate with a diagram or detail.

 The bricks are arranged in radial way, each brick is directly aligned to the center of a sphere of 6 meters diameter inscribed in the chapel. This spherical condition of the structure lets te structure work primarily to compression. The biggest challenge was to give structural strength to all those parts of the project that were outside of this system. To plan and direct the masonry work we developed a ‘compass “(inspired by the table used for coil ovens) which draws a curved level for each course and at the same time gives the slope of each brick so that the small side of it is flat with space.

Beyond the inscribed sphere, as main idea of spatiality and structure, and inspired by the Pantheon, the space’s  final composition is the combination of a cylinder section, two straight walls  tangent to it that extend it to the west, a segment of a sphere or a conical dome and vault.

 Did you use some form of formwork for the installation of the structure? Is there a photographic record of this process?

 The project’s main idea is the relation between the income horizontal evening’s grazing light  and the projection of the cross inside. For this reason it was very important that the interior surface was continuous and smooth avoid shadows that interfere with the cross. This line of work led think that if we use formwork we were risking to find defects that were impossible to repair later. Remember that under a raking light a few millimeters gap can cast long shadows. We decided to use two associated techniques (Half orange oven and Mexican vault) with which we could build the shell in a self sustained manner and monitor every day progress of it with the setting sun as the shell itself was being terminated and permanently exposed.

 

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Zechner & Zechner Place New Office Building into Vienna Barracks Courtyard


Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

Viennese firm Zechner & Zechner have been awarded first prize in a competition to design a new office building in the courtyard of the historic Rossau Barracks building in downtown Vienna. The firm’s entry, called “Floating Double-X,” takes inspiration from the symmetry of its context to place a minimally invasive office block into the existing courtyard space.


Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

The competition’s challenge was to design a new office building with room for 400 employees of the Ministry of National Defense and Sport within the existing inner court of the Rossauer Barracks. Due to the barrack’s status as a distinctive landmark of the city, the solution required a sensitive approach. Zechner & Zechner chose to address this by minimizing the interference between the new and existing buildings.


Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

Using the architectural concept of “double symmetry,” the new building takes the form of a double-x shape in plan, aligned with the axes of the existing buildings. The facade is covered in a mirroring system that reflects the elevations of the barracks, creating a visual counterpart to the original building.


Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

Courtesy of Zechner & Zechner

The structure is also functionality and environmentally unimposing; slender, irregular columns raise the building 5.5 meters above the ground, allowing users to continue to traverse the courtyard unimpeded, and passive techniques allow the project to meet the highest standards of energy efficiency and sustainability. Through these techniques, the energy consumption for heating, cooling and lighting is minimized, and pedestrians can use the shade created from the building to escape the heat on a warm summer day.

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Lausward Power Plant / kadawittfeldarchitektur


© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner


© Jens Kirchner


© Jens Kirchner


© Jens Kirchner


© Jens Kirchner

  • Client: Stadtwerke Düsseldorf
  • Building Services : SIEMENS AG
  • Project Management : Burkhard Floors
  • Structural Engineering : Bollinger, Grohmann, Frankfurt am Main
  • Building Physics: TOHR Bauphysik GmbH & Co. KG, Bergisch-Gladbach
  • Building Services Engineering: Ingenieurbüro PGH Becker, Huke – Hoffmann, Dormagen (City Window)
  • Electrical Engineering : Ingenieurbüro Sturm, Krefeld (illumination of power plant facade; City Window)
  • Lighting Design : Andres Lichtplanung, Hamburg
  • Fire Engineering : IBAS Consulting, Wuppertal (fire protection concept of City Window)
  • Project Management / Site Management: Siemens AG (primary contractor)

© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner

Site Plan

Site Plan

From the architect. Building envelope design of new natural gas power plant and construction of visitor observation deck at Düsseldorf’s Rhine Bend in immediate vicinity of the harbour and city centre. The facade links the observation deck and power plant components creating a complex of buildings which, through an interplay of closed frames and illuminated joints, has become a structural logo for the city’s energy supplier at night.


© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner

Plan

Plan

 The new highly efficient and climate-friendly natural gas power plant is visible from afar at the bend of the river Rhine and, as a distinct landmark, indicates the city’s south-west boundary. A facade made of steel frames wraps the various building components of the new power plant in a uniform cloak. The individual modules have been designed to meet the diverse requirements of the inner workings; at the same time, the rhythmic pattern of the skin divides the vast scale of the facility into acceptable units.


© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner

Diagram

Diagram

The largest frame element completing the plant in the north-east, the so-called “City Window”, incorporates the smokestack – the highest point in the complex. A lift takes groups of visitors up to an observation deck approximately 45 metres above the ground from where, through a fully glazed facade, they can see across the vast expanse of the power plant as far as Cologne and north across the river Rhine to Düsseldorf’s city centre.


© Jens Kirchner

© Jens Kirchner

Section

Section

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7 (More) Websites to Help Us Be Better Architects





Last year we published a list of 22 websites meant to make an architect’s job a little bit easier. From selecting the perfect color scheme to tracking the price of your next big purchase, solving technical problems or simply trying to balance your sleep and caffeine intake, the list sought to offer solutions to a diversity of issues – with something (hopefully) for everyone.

This year we offer an addendum with seven additional sites meant to further allay the ever-stressful life of architects. From using peripherals for additional screen real estate to receiving your daily fill of the top architecture news, or converting PDFs to DWGs and adding scale figures to models, ArchDaily seeks to share more of the best of what the web can offer to architects.

Scale





1:25, 1:50, 1:87, 1:100, Scale offers a variety of architectural figurines meant to add the to-size people that every model craves.

Modelo





A 3D collaboration platform meant to revolutionize the CAD industry, Modelo uses best-in-class technologies and design thinking to alleviate communication, presentation, and project management challenges. 

Sketchfab





One of the leaders in VR, Sketchfab is browser-based platform for sharing and viewing 3D models that seeks to make this technology as universal to architects of the future as digital drawings and renderings are today. 

CadSoftTools: PDF to DWG Converter





This online automation transforms PDFs into editable AutoCad DWG files with all the lines, polylines, hatches, arcs, ellipses, and images intact.

PimpMyDrawing.com





Need vector based characters to populate your renderings? PimpMyDrawing.com offers high-detail outlines of models to complete monochromatic project schematics – and they’re free!

I Architecture News





1 Email with the 5 Most Shared pieces of content from the Top 19 Architecture Websites. Daily.

Duet





Transform your iPad or other peripheral into the second-monitor you never knew you had. Never miss an important email, iMessage, or article with the ability to multitask permanently, and then at the end of the day, your tablet resumes being the mobile device you always knew it to be. 

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Travessa Das Necessidades / Fragmentos de Arquitectura


© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira


© Francisco Nogueira


© Francisco Nogueira


© Francisco Nogueira


© Francisco Nogueira


© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

Plan 1

Plan 1

From the architect. This building, located next to the Tapada das Necessidades in Lisbon, consists of a three-storey structure plus attic, two exterior patios and a large terrace on the middle floor. The pre-existing building has been completely restored, transforming it into a single-unit family home: originality is emphasized, whilst functionality is fully embraced in order to create a contemporary family living space.


© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

Section

Section

Taking full advantage of the original features of the exterior walls, roof, and window and door openings, the interior spaces were reorganised and adapted, creating areas designed to make the most of natural light on all four elevations. The restoration of the existing patio and terrace was intended to emphasize the relationship between indoor and outdoor living spaces.


© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

Regarding room distribution: the entrance area is the point of access for the upper and lower floors. The lower floor houses the service areas and parking. The communal living areas (living room, dining room and kitchen), located on the first floor, are linked to the outside through large windows leading onto the central terrace – the heart of the middle floor. The three bedrooms are distributed on the top floor and enjoy direct sunlight and fantastic views. The attic provides an open-plan play area.


© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

© Francisco Nogueira

Section

Section

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Trahan Architects to Transform Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre


Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Atlanta’s Woodruff Arts Center has tapped New Orleans-based Trahan Architects to lead the renovation of the Tony Award winning Alliance Theatre. A cornerstone member of the Woodruff Arts campus, which is also home to Richard Meier’s High Museum and museum expansions by Renzo Piano, the project will include a complete transformation of the Alliance Stage, theater rehearsal spaces, education spaces and support facilities. Selected from a competition of over 30 firms, Trahan’s design will be the first major renovation for the theatre since its construction in 1968.


Courtesy of Trahan Architects


Courtesy of Trahan Architects


Courtesy of Trahan Architects


Courtesy of Trahan Architects


Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Led by Trahan Architects founder Victor F. “Trey” Trahan and partner Leigh Breslau, the design of the 650-seat Alliance Theater focuses on patron experience, fostering connectivity within the audience chamber; between performer and patron, and among the patrons themselves.

Principal Trey Trahan explains, “We should be thinking about a space that celebrates equality of each person and the diversity of Atlanta. We created a theater that responded to that elevated participation from the public.”


Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

This is done by breaking the standard vertical threshold of a theatre – blurring the distinction between levels through sensuous wood forms and minimizing the separation between the orchestra and balcony levels. Comfortable seating linked with cascading staircases and terraces will place the audience closer to the stage, and accessible seating will be available on multiple levels, including areas in the center of the house not typically designated for wheelchair bound patrons. The result is a space that will feel intimate and inviting.


Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

To achieve this effect, Trahan employed Brooklyn-based sculptor Matthias Pliessnig to help create the white oak forms that respond to the site lines and acoustical requirements of the theatre. This strategy follows Trahan’s interest in working not only with artists, but also with craftsmen to create textures that can withstand and thrive in spaces of high usage.

“This room will be beautiful at the end of construction, but will age to become even more beautiful as the wood ages and patinas. We hope that the geometry of wood surface draws you in and allows you to feel it as you move through the space,” says Trahan.


Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

The theater’s inner lobbies and circulation spaces have been redesigned to wrap around the performance chamber on both levels, providing comfortable movement throughout, and integrated signage will animate the spaces and provide information on current and upcoming events. New back-of-house spaces including dressing rooms, lounges, offices and artistic support spaces can be found at a level below the stage, and a new mezzanine and full floor multi-purpose hall will be inserted behind the stage house for production and rehearsal support. A second rehearsal hall will replace existing offices on the the third floor, and on the fourth level, a double-height wardrobe shop will feature restored skylights to flood the rooms with natural light.

State-of-the-art technology will be featured in areas of the renovation, including installing lighting catwalks to make use of the stage easier and safer. The renovation is part of Phase I of the Woodruff Arts Center’s Transformation Campaign. Future phases will include renovation and addition to other Woodruff facilities and a redesigned campus plan.


Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects

Courtesy of Trahan Architects
  • Architects: Trahan Architects
  • Location: 1280 Peachtree St NE, Atlanta, GA 30309, United States
  • Design Principal: Trey Trahan, FAIA
  • Managing Principal: Leigh Breslau, AIA
  • Design Director: Scott Melancon, AIA
  • Designer: Wenyun Qian
  • Collaborating Artist: Matthias Pliessnig
  • Mep Engineer: DLB Associates Consulting Engineers
  • Structural Engineer: Uzun + Case
  • Theatre Consultant: Theatre Project Consultants
  • Acoustical Engineer: Talaske Group
  • Cost Management: Cost+Plus
  • Lighting: Fisher Marantz Stone
  • Graphic Design: THIRST
  • Life Safety: Jensen Hughes
  • Vertical Transportation: Lerch Bates
  • Area: 70000.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2018
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Trahan Architects

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